Operation D-Elite

The EliteTorrents website was replaced with this notice from the US authorities.

Operation D-Elite was an operation by agents of the FBI and U.S. Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement against leading members of EliteTorrents, a BitTorrent tracker site, resulting in five months of prison, five months of home arrest, and a $3,000 fine against Grant T. Stanley on October 17, 2006.[1] Another administrator of the site, Scott McCausland, received the same sentence on December 19, 2006.[2]

On May 25, 2005, authorities executed ten search warrants across the United States and seized the EliteTorrents domain. Like previous actions against BitTorrent sites such as LokiTorrent, the authorities obtained server logs of people who had been downloading and uploading through the site's BitTorrent tracker. As of January 15, 2007, there has been no action taken against the vast majority of normal members on LokiTorrent or EliteTorrents.[citation needed]

In addition to the Star Wars workprint, the owner of the EliteTorrents domain name lived in the United States, which made the site an easier target for US authorities. However, the site's server was located in the Netherlands, and the other BitTorrent trackers located on that server continued to operate.

When the site was first taken down, people who tried to access it were confronted by a notice, apparently created in Microsoft Word, which led the owners to announce that the site had been a victim of a DDoS attack or some other type of hoax. However, in the early hours of May 25, the United States Department of Justice and FBI announced that they had taken down the website.

Grant T. Stanley - Five months of jail time, five months of home arrest, and a $3,000 fine was leveled on October 17, 2006.

Scott McCausland - Five months of jail time, five months of home arrest, and a $3,000 fine was leveled on October 17, 2006.

An Duc Do 1982 (age 34–35) known online as R313007[3] was a Drexel University graduate. In 2005 he was arrested in connection with uploading Star Wars Episode III as part of Operation D-Elite[3] Faced with the steep jail term An Duc Do plead guilty to conspiracy and copyright infringement. While Duc Do shared movies like Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, The Flight of the Phoenix, and King Arthur from a computer server where 133,000 users had access to it he was not a high user. Floyd Miller, the prosecutor for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Philadelphia where Duc Do was charged said, “They [other Elite Torrent members] threatened to kick him out of the organization because he wasn’t uploading as much as some of the other pirates were doing,”[4] As part of the guilty plea he was sentenced to 3 years probation, a $15,000 fine and 400 hours of community service.